Cahokia may sound like a sound made during a sneeze but it is actually a UNESCO World Heritage Site near St. Louis.

St. Louis as seen from on top of Monks Mound at Cahokia on a very overcast day in August 2014.

I thought today, the autumnal equinox, would provide a great context to write about the mounds near St Louis that are evidence for the importance of seasonal reckoning and measurement to the First Peoples of America. Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site is the location of the largest city north of Mexico until European colonization. Cahokia was a thriving urban center of a Mississippian Culture Chiefdom between AD 850 and 1300. St. Louis, whose skyline is clearly visible from the top of Monk’s Mound, was known as Mound City in the 1800s until all the mounds within the city were erased from the landscape by the 20th Century.

Today, Monday, September 22, 2014, is the first Equinox to occur since I visited Woodhenge this summer. In Tucson, where I live, the celestial equator will be crossed at 7:29 PM MST.

And yes I said Woodhenge, not Stonehenge. I visited the North American equivalent of the gargantuan lithic structure in Wiltshire, UK.

Woodhenge

Portion of reconstructed Woodhenge Circle at Cahokia Mounds showing scale of the site. The posts are difficult to see against the green secondary growth background on the overcast day of

Image taken from and showing henge center post and north and northeast posts of the reconstructed henge circle marking. The posts that are significant to seasonal astronomical measurements are denoted with light colored painted bands. Red ochre was found at the post hole excavations and is thought to have been used on the henge poles. Here you can see bits of the red ochre color on the henge center post.

Two posts that are part of the reconstructed Woodhenge circle at Cahokia. The leftmost post shows how posts that align with the cardinal directions essential to solstice and equinox alignments are marked with light-colored bands of paint.

Woodhenge was fashioned out of organic materials rather than stone, so what I saw were contemporary timbers in the exact locations of where other timbers stood that made up the third circle of the henge constructed around AD 1000. The current henge was reconstructed in 1985 at the original location.

Cahokia information can be found in many archaeological and cultural online sites and resources, but I think the Wikipedia article on Cahokia as retrieved today does a great job of covering all the basics about the site. The World Heritage Site coverage is solid and reminds us that Cahokia is an essential resource for understanding the development of modern cultures and civilizations around the world. The Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site itself is nice but leaves a bit to be desired on the User Interface (UI) end per typography and website technology side.

I have wanted to see and walk the land of Cahokia for decades. On 20 August 2014 I finally did it.

I have driven by the signs for Cahokia every time I have driven between NE Indiana where I grew up and Southern Arizona in the last 25 years. That is quite a few times since I moved to Arizona 25 years ago. I discovered at a fairly late age that I like to drive and enjoy road tripping by myself… but I was often on a fairly tight timeline. The sign for Cahokia Mounds would appear as I drove on the interstate approaching St. Louis, it seemed that every time that I saw it I would need to get a couple more hours of driving done before stopping for the day. So I would drive by without stopping and swear that next time I would plan to stay in the area and spend a day hiking around the site.

I wanted to explore Cahokia with Hubby as we drove back to Tucson on the last half of the 25th anniversary road trip. But I rather reluctantly offered to drive the car and dog back across the country by myself so he could fly back and have a full week to prepare for the new semester, and some unanticipated professional travel the first week of classes. He accepted my offer and said this would allow me to spend more time near where I grew up and visit my brothers in a leisurely fashion than if he was there too and chomping at the bit to get back on the road.

This turned out to be a very fortuitous turn of events for non-archaeological reasons. Spending time on my brother’s land next to the farm where I grew up called up memories Dad’s stories about flaked flint and polished stone, Indian trails, and humorous “re-enactments” of key scenes from Tecumseh’s life and his brother the Prophet. His tales of our family history also included First Americans who were wives to early American fur traders and trappers.

These stories with which I grew up, and the artifacts that I played with as a child, were primarily from Eastern Woodland tribes. The Mississippian groups such as those that lived near Cahokia Mounds were culturally distinct from Woodland Cultures. Dad taught me that most of the tribal groups in Indiana were little groups pushed into the swampy, malarial and wet woodlands between the Iroquois confederacy to the east, the Cherokee to the South, and the Plains Indians to the west.

I grew up hearing my father’s stories of mound builders and handling projectile points, axes, and ceremonial lithic pieces my family found while farming Indiana land over the 19th and 20th Centuries. I heard storied of the “bird people.” In August I made sense of those memories. Having studied anthropology in college and graduate school I had better than average understanding of Woodland and Mississippian cultures. But the artifacts I knew and played with came to life when I saw them in context with entire tool assemblages.

I had not been prepared for, through studies or stories from childhood, the scale of the Cahokia Mounds site and similarities of the cultural complexities with that of other First American cultures. This Mississippian site I walked was as big as the majority of the Mayan Chichen Itza I walked in 2012.

The almost 200 mounds on the site varied in form and function. The sloping banks of Monk’s Mound, the largest mound at Cahokia, can mask the enormity of the mound until you get ready to ascend the contemporary steps that lead to the top.

View from the bottom of the steps of Monks Mound.

Public works of this size are evidence of a complex society capable of specialization that allowed some members to specialize in non-subsistence activities.

My dog taking in the view over the side and down the slope of Monks Mound where rabbits were active in the brush. Yes, dogs are welcome at the site while leashed.

Solstice and Equinox rituals marked the annual cycles for agricultural purposes though the activities were undoubtedly interwoven with other religious, political and economic activities and the view from the Chieftain’s house atop Monk’s Mound could observe them all.

I have always loved the ways the words “autumnal equinox” roll off my tongue. Three syllables each, vowel heavy, q and x, and n sounds, quirky smooth complexity. The season was sort of a damp gray melancholy after a few days of vibrant color where I grew up in the mid-west, but where I now live it is a time of pleasant cooling and a growing season until the heavy frost hits, if it does.

So the lead up to the busiest time of the year has had very different contexts at different times in my life. I find that time gets away from me at this time of year if I don’t map it out before the whirlwind of holidaze frenzy hits. Usually I can intertwine work and personal schedules without much effort but at this time of year I have to plan ahead to have either part of my life function through January.

So for me that means creating:

Google Docs Spread Sheet

Holidays

Personal Schedule

Work Schedule

Lectures/events

Editorial Calendar

Movie Releases

Significant Historic Dates

Gifts Place/Space

Cards & Mailing Supplies

Decorating Plan

Gifts List

Yes, it is the time of year for planning, organizing, and cleaning. I approach autumn much like others might approach Spring in other parts of the country. The best time of the year is at hand and it is a perfect time to turn off the A/C, open the windows, and air the house out, so to speak. It just happens at a time of the year that increases in intensity until the new calendar year. The difference is that the calendar rolls over during the three or four weeks of winter we have.

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About Me

I have written and published many blogs over the last 15 years on the topics of Later Born Baby Boomers, Peace & Justice Activism, Virtual Worlds, Gene Stratton-Porter, and Medical Child Abuse. I love research, information and the quest for knowledge. I'm an anthropologist by training, and a freelance content creator by vocation. I love things that make sense, could be, and might be so I enjoy good speculative fiction along the lines of Cory Doctorow and TV shows like Dr. Who and Orphan Black.